Title: Professor Arthur Chandler
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3- Professor Arthur Chandler
- Office HUM 409
- Mailbox HUM 410
- Phone 338-7412 or 338-1099 (Department Office)
- email arthurc_at_sfsu.edu
4The Syllabus Goals and Visions
- The purpose of this course is to comprehend,
criticize, and appreciate some of the great works
of Paris. Humanities 375 is the biography of a
city, the story of her sources, resources,
achievements and failures, changing phases and
permanent nature.... - There will be some lectures on crucial points of
Parisian history. But "Biography of a City
Paris" is a humanities study, not a history
course. We will concentrate, not so much on what
went into the making of Paris, but what came out
of her creative energies. - And finally, we will seek to understand one of
the central mysteries of any person or place
worth knowing - What is the nature of the soul of the city?
5Basic Purposes of this Class
- 1. Know the lore of the city's past history is
character - 2. Encounter appreciate some of her greatest
works - 3. Understand unique personality of Paris
6HUMANITIES
- How many have taken a Humanities course? A
dynamics of the city course? - What ARE the humanities?
- Literature, the fine arts, philosophy, history
- What IS Humanities ?
- The integrative study of society, ideas, and the
arts - The best that has been thought and expressed
7The Syllabus WORK
- Mid-term examination
- 30 of final grade
- Final examination
- 60 of final grade
- Essay/Web Page
- Due on Final Exam Day 10 of final grade
- Only written medical excuses are allowed for
missing an examination. No make-up examinations
will be given. - Percentages are approximate. Other factors,
such as class participation, may also affect the
final grade.
8TERM ESSAY
- The term essay is optional. You can write one
just for the knowledge gained, or for test
insurance. For your subject, you may choose any
French painting, drawing, sculpture, tapestry or
craftwork (furniture, jewel boxes, etc.) in the
Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco or
the Haggin Museum in Stockton(!). In a 8-10 page
essay or web page - 1) Describe the work in detail.
- 2) How is the work typical of the era in which it
was produced? What kind of Parisians would use or
admire this work? - 3) What special characteristics tell you of the
artist's unique style in the work? - 4) On a separate page, include a bibliography of
at least three works that would let the reader
find out more about the subject. - 5) If possible, provide a reproduction
photograph, drawing, xerox copy, etc. of the
work you are writing about. - 6) Final essays will be evaluated for excellence
in form and content. Be sure your projects are
presented to me as error-free and elegant as
possible! - DUE DATE July 12 firm (no late papers accepted)
9Required Reading
- Molière, The Misanthrope (optional)
- La Rochefoucauld, Maxims AND Maxims of Madam de
Sablé - Balzac, Old Goriot
- Baudelaire, Paris Spleen
- Hemingway, Moveable Feast
10Required Viewing and Listening
- All Slides, Music, Video, and Powerpoint
Presentations - What if I miss a class?
11About the Prof
- Played electric flute in Thesis, 1969-1971
- Taught Paris since 1981
- Won The National Fels Award for Non-Fiction
- Came to SFSU in year of longest student strike in
American history
Charles D. Perlee Award as Outstanding Humanities
Educator NIST Grant for Distributed Manufacturing
Systems Development Current Grooves The
Internet, SOMA, Ballroom Dancing, MR2, Goa
Trance, Vienna
12- Paris Climacterics
- Whats a climacteric?
- 1.A period or year of life when physiological
changes take place in the body. - 2. A critical stage, period, or year.
- 1100-1500
- 1643-1789
- 1789-1871
- 1851-present
13THE FOUR SIGNATURE BUILDINGS OF PARIS
- A signature building is one whose stature, form
and purpose proclaim the dominant value of its
host city at the time when it was built. The four
signature buildings of Paris have been - The Age of Faith NOTRE DAME
- Ancien Régime LES INVALIDES
- Revolution ARC DE TRIOMPHE
- City of Light TOUR EIFFEL
14The value enshrined in Notre Dame is WHAT CAN I
DO TO BE SAVED? The name of the building, the
Last Judgement sculptures in the central
tympanum, the call of the bells and the voice of
the organ, the rose windows and the rituals at
the altar all combine to exhort the mortal to
seek salvation through the guidance of the
church.
A serious place on serious earth it isIn whose
blent air all our compulsions meet,Are
recognized, and robed as destinies. Philip
Larkin
15The church of the Hotel des Invalides was built
in lesser part by Louis XIV to minister to the
spiritual needs of the soldiers who fought his
wars, and in greater part to remind Paris of its
new central concern HOW CAN I HELP FRANCE
ACHIEVE GLORY?
Glory I prefer to all things and to life
itself, a lofty reputation. The ardor that we
feel for la gloire is not one of those feeble
passions that cool with possession. Her favors,
which can never be obtained except with effort,
never cause disgust, and he who can refrain from
longing for fresh ones is unworthy of all those
he has received. Louis XIV
16The Arc de Triomphe was commissioned by Napoleon
in part to commemorate French Victory over
foreign foes, and in part to monumentalize his
imposition of the new reigning value for Paris
HOW CAN PARIS BECOME THE EMPIRE OF THE WORLD?
O France, adieu! Thou art too great to remain
merely a fatherland. To become a goddess, thou
must be separated from motherhood. Soon thou
shalt vanish in a transfiguration. Thou shalt no
longer be France thou shalt be Humanity! No
longer a nation, thou shalt be Ubiquity. Thou
art destined to dissolve utterly, radiating
outward, transcending thy frontiers. Resign
thyself to thy immensity. Adieu, O people!
Hail, Humankind! Submit to thy sublime and
fateful enlargement, O my country and as Athens
became Greece, as Rome became Christianity, thou,
France, become the world! Victor Hugo
17The Eiffel Tower is the explicit symbol of Paris
as the new capital of the Avant-Garde. It
proclaims WE SHALL PROGRESS BY THE APPLICATION
OF TECHNOLOGY FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF HUMAN LIFE.
Old abandoned towers, no one listens to you any
more. Surely you see that the poles of the world
have shifted and that the world now turns on my
iron axis? I am universal force disciplined by
design. Human thought courses through my limbs.
My brow shines with the light drawn from the
source of all light. You are ignorance I am
knowledge. You enslave man I free him. I know
the secrets behind those miracles which terrified
believers of old. My limitless power will remake
the universe and will establish your paradise
here on earth. I do not need your God, invented
to explain the creation whose laws I comprehend.
These laws are enough for me. They are enough
for those souls I have wrested from you and shall
never return. Eugene Melchior de Vogué
18The Motto of Paris
19finis